Upconverting Core-Shell Nanocrystals with High Quantum Yield under Low Irradiance: On the Role of Isotropic and Thick Shells
Stefan Fischer, Noah J.J. Johnson, Jothirmayanantham Pichaandi, Jan, Christoph Goldschmidt, and Frank C.J.M van Veggel

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that isotropic, thick shells on core-shell nanocrystals significantly enhance near-infrared to visible upconversion efficiency at low irradiance levels, with potential applications in solar energy and bioimaging.
Contribution
It introduces a rate equation model showing how energy migration affects surface quenching and demonstrates that thick, isotropic shells greatly improve UCQY at low irradiance levels.
Findings
Achieved an internal UCQY of 2.0% at 0.43 W/cm2 irradiance
Normalized UCQY is 120 times higher than comparable nanomaterials
Thick, isotropic shells reduce surface quenching and enhance luminescence
Abstract
Colloidal upconverter nanocrystals (UCNCs) that convert near-infrared photons to higher energies are promising for applications ranging from life sciences to solar energy harvesting. However, practical applications of UCNCs are hindered by their low upconversion quantum yield (UCQY) and the high irradiances necessary to produce relevant upconversion luminescence. Achieving high UCQY under practically relevant irradiance remains a major challenge. The UCQY is severely limited due to non-radiative surface quenching processes. We present a rate equation model for migration of the excitation energy to show that surface quenching does not only affect the lanthanide ions directly at the surface but also many other lanthanide ions quite far away from the surface. The average migration path length is in the order of several nanometers and depends on the doping as well as the irradiance of the…
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